Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
2d 704
Mildred Marie BURNETT, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
ROY MARTIN CONSTRUCTION, INC., a corporation; Roy Martin,
individually and as an agent, servant, employee, officer,
director and stockholder of Roy Martin Construction, Inc., a
corporation; F.C. Burnett; A Parcel of Land located in the
South 1/2 of the SE 1/4 of the 1/4 of Section 18,
Township 20 South, Range 2 West, Shelby County, Alabama,
etc., Defendants-Appellees.
No. 87-7377.
United States Court of Appeals,
Eleventh Circuit.
June 16, 1988.
I. FACTS
1
Mildred M. Burnett brought this action to quiet title to residential realty located
in Shelby County, Alabama. She sought to recover compensatory and punitive
damages for fraud and conspiracy against defendants Roy Martin Construction,
Inc., as the buyer of the realty, and its president, Roy Martin, individually and
in a corporate capacity,1 F.C. Burnett, as the seller of the realty, and the parcel
of land in question.
The Alabama court never issued a clerk's deed or registrar's deed pursuant to
the above portion of the divorce decree, nor did Mildred Burnett ever record
any title or claim to the property until the tract had been conveyed to Roy
Martin.
In 1982, F.C. Burnett approached Roy Martin in regard to sale of the property.
From a conversation with Mildred Burnett, Roy Martin learned she was
claiming an interest in the property by virtue of the 1981 divorce decree. Roy
Martin, therefore, terminated further consideration of purchasing the property.
8
Roy Martin was approached again about buying the property in 1986. Roy
Martin ordered a title search from a title company requesting that the title
company specifically search for recordation of any claim to title of the property
by Mildred Burnett. When the title company did not find any reference thereto,
Roy Martin bought the property for $35,000.
Mildred Burnett contends that the sale was a fraudulent attempt to defeat the
1981 divorce decree and deprive Mildred Burnett of her lawful right to an
interest in the residential realty. Roy Martin asserts that the decree upon which
Mildred Burnett relies did not convey title to the property because the decree
was not accompanied by a clerk's or registrar's deed as required by Alabama
law. We hold that the quoted divorce decree of December 1, 1981, barred F.C.
Burnett from conveying the entire interest in the realty to Roy Martin. We,
therefore, reverse the grant of summary judgment and remand the case back to
the district court for trial.
II. DISCUSSION
10
A motion for summary judgment must be viewed in the light most favorable to
the non-moving party. Adickes v. S.H. Kress & Co., 398 U.S. 144, 90 S.Ct.
1598, 26 L.Ed.2d 142 (1970). Rule 56(c) of the Fed.R.Civ.P. precludes
summary judgment unless there is no genuine issue of material fact and the
moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
11
Mildred Burnett's interest in the realty was clearly delineated by the final
decree of divorce of December 1, 1981. Whatever her real and complete
interest in the residential and marital properties were prior to the invocation of
the jurisdiction, power and authority of the Circuit Court of Shelby County,
Alabama, there can be no dispute as to what the intentions of the court were at
the time of its entry of the final decree. A close reading of the decree shows an
absolute settlement of the residential and marital properties for the benefit of
the two litigants and a third party beneficiary, their granddaughter.
12
In granting Roy Martin's motion for summary judgment, the district court found
that in order to prevail on either her request to quiet title or her claim of
conspiracy and fraud, Mildred Burnett must show that she had vested title to
the real estate. The district court's finding thwarted the intent of the divorce
decree in regard to the realty. Such a finding is contrary to the law of Alabama
as set out in Martin v. Magnolia Terrace, 366 So.2d 275 (Ala.1979). As the
Supreme Court of Alabama recognized in Martin v. Magnolia Terrace, supra,
the divorce court need not address the issue of ownership of the property, but
the Circuit Court of Shelby County, Alabama, did, in fact, address the issue, not
only of property ownership, but property possession as well.
13
It is the intent and purpose of the divorce court, evidenced from the
proceedings and decree as a whole which must control. Martin v. Magnolia
Terrace, supra; Coffey v. Cross, 185 Ala. 86, 64 So. 95 (1913). We, therefore,
hold the decree prohibited Burnett from conveying his interest in the property.
14
Roy Martin asserts that "[e]ven if Mildred Burnett had a claim of title to the
property, she did not protect that interest by properly documenting and
recording her interest." Roy Martin relies heavily on Sec. 35-4-90(a), Code of
Alabama. In First Alabama Bank of Huntsville v. Key, 394 So.2d 67
(Ala.Civ.App.1981) the Alabama Court of Civil Appeals, faced with an
unrecorded conveyance and the application of Sec. 35-4-90(a), held that actual
notice of a plaintiff's interest was sufficient to render inoperative the application
of Sec. 35-4-90(a). See also Alexander v. Fountain, 195 Ala. 3, 70 So. 669
(1916). Roy Martin clearly had actual notice of Mildred Burnett's claim. Roy
Martin, therefore, is not entitled to any protection under Sec. 35-4-90(a). Roy
Martin proceeded with the sale of the realty without due regard to the
pronouncements of the Circuit Court of Shelby County in its final decree of
divorce and against the full force and effect of the holding of the Supreme
Court of Alabama in Martin v. Magnolia Terrace, supra.
15
Roy Martin purchased the realty on behalf of Roy Martin Construction, Inc.
Roy Martin and Roy Martin Construction, Inc., will be referred to collectively
as "Roy Martin" for purposes of this opinion